Conditions of emergence of the Sooty Bark Disease and aerobiology of Cryptostroma corticale in Europe
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2023
abstract:
The sooty bark disease (SBD) is an emerging disease affecting sycamore maple trees (Acer pseudoplatanus)
in Europe. Cryptostroma corticale, the causal agent, putatively native to eastern North America, can be
also pathogenic for humans causing pneumonitis. It was first detected in 1945 in Europe, with markedly
increasing reports since 2000. Pathogen development appears to be linked to heat waves and drought
episodes. Here, we analyse the conditions of the SBD emergence in Europe based on a three-decadal timeseries data set. We also assess the suitability of aerobiological samples using a species-specific quantitative
PCR assay to inform the epidemiology of C. corticale, through a regional study in France comparing twoyear aerobiological and epidemiological data, and a continental study including 12 air samplers from six
countries (Czechia, France, Italy, Portugal, Sweden and Switzerland).
We found that an accumulated water deficit in spring and summer lower than -132 mm correlates
with SBD outbreaks. Our results suggest that C. corticale is an efficient airborne pathogen which can disperse its conidia as far as 310 km from the site of the closest disease outbreak. Aerobiology of C. corticale
followed the SBD distribution in Europe. Pathogen detection was high in countries within the host native
area and with longer disease presence, such as France, Switzerland and Czech Republic, and sporadic in
Italy, where the pathogen was reported just once. The pathogen was absent in samples from Portugal and
Sweden, where the disease has not been reported yet. We conclude that aerobiological surveillance can
inform the spatial distribution of the SBD, and contribute to early detection in pathogen-free countries.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Acer pseudoplatanus; aerobiology; airborne fungal spores; climate change; drought-induced forest disease; heat wave; invasive pathogen; maple bark disease; quantitative species-specific PCR
List of contributors: